The Perfect Husband's Receipt Trap A Wife's Revenge

📖 Full Story Below! This is just a preview. Read the complete story at the bottom of this page via the official app link.

The Perfect Husband's Receipt Trap A Wife's Revenge

My husband gave me twenty thousand dollars a month for household expenses. Everyone said I was the luckiest woman alive.

But only I knew the truth. I couldn't touch a single cent of that money without permission.

Groceries had to be logged. Clothes required an application. Even a $9.80 bottle of soy sauce meant I had to smooth out the receipt, photograph it, and send it to him for inspection.

If I was even a second late, the interrogation began.

"Spending my money like water again? How did I end up marrying such a wasteful woman!"

Then my mother was hospitalized with a stomach hemorrhage, and she urgently needed five thousand dollars for surgery.

I begged him to transfer the money. All he said was:

"No receipt, no proof. How do I know your mother's actually sick and you two aren't just scheming to take my money?"

That day, I sat in the hospital corridor, staring at his latest Instagram post: Everything I earn is so my wife and kids can have a better life. I laughed out loud.

At eleven that night, Irvin Matthews's Instagram updated right on schedule.

Front and center in the nine-photo grid was a screenshot of a bank transfer: $30,000 sent to Wife.

The caption read: No matter how hard I work, seeing my wife and kids living well makes it all worth it.

The comments rolled in fast.

"Irvin spoils his wife like crazy. Twenty grand a month for household expenses? Unreal."

"Men like him are one in a million. His wife must've saved a country in a past life to land a husband like that!"

His mother, Loretta Matthews, was the first to hit like, followed immediately by a comment:

"That's my son. Always stepping up. Works himself to the bone out there and still gives her all that money. Unlike some people who sit around at home doing nothing all day. Completely useless."

His sister, Susan Matthews, chimed in right after:

"Some people are just born lucky, marrying a man as generous as my brother."

I stared at that post, my fingers slowly curling into fists.

And while I sat there in a daze, Irvin's messages had already come through in rapid succession:

"Didn't you say you bought soy sauce? Where's the receipt?"

"Grace Whitfield, are you using grocery shopping as an excuse to blow money again?!"

I stared at those two messages, and something clenched hard around my chest.

The next second, his call came through. He didn't bother with a greeting.

"Grace, where's the receipt for the soy sauce?"

I glanced instinctively toward the kitchen trash can. My voice came out tight.

"I was busy cooking. I accidentally threw it away with the vegetable scraps. It was a mistake. I didn't do it on purpose."

"A mistake?"

Irvin let out a laugh, dripping with contempt.

"You can't even keep track of a $9.80 receipt? Grace, is your memory that bad, or are your fingers that sticky? You know the answer to that."

"Since there's no receipt, the soy sauce is coming out of our son's tutoring fund."

My throat seized. The anger hit me like a wall of flame.

This again. Last month, I'd bought our son a three-dollar box of candy without reporting it to him fast enough, and he'd docked the money from our son's fruit allowance.

For an entire month, our son didn't eat a single piece of fruit.

I took a deep breath and gripped my phone until my knuckles ached.

"It's one bottle of soy sauce. What could I possibly have done with the money?"

Irvin's voice turned mocking.

"'Just one bottle of soy sauce.' You don't earn money, so you don't know what it takes. I've told you a hundred times: log every grocery purchase, keep every receipt. How many times have we been over this? One missing receipt, and who's to say you're not skimming off the top?"

"Grace, I honestly don't understand. Twenty thousand a month in household expenses and it's still not enough for you? You have to nickel-and-dime me over soy sauce? How did I end up married to such a wasteful woman?!"

The line went dead. I stood there, staring at the phone buzzing with the disconnected tone, utterly hollow.

My son looked up at me, his voice small and careful.

"Mommy, am I not going to get fruit again this month?"

My heart ached. I reached out and stroked his head, too choked up to speak.

To everyone else, I was the pampered stay-at-home wife with a twenty-thousand-dollar monthly allowance, living a life of luxury.

But only I knew the truth. That twenty thousand wasn't money. It was a leash.

Every grocery run had to be logged. Every piece of clothing required approval. Even a $9.80 bottle of soy sauce meant smoothing out the receipt, snapping a photo, and sending it to Irvin for inspection.

One second too slow, and I'd get an earful.

One missing receipt, and my son's expenses for the following month would take the hit.

I let out a bitter laugh. When would this so-called twenty-thousand-dollar life ever end?

The next afternoon, I went to pick up Tommy Abbott from preschool. The moment I reached the entrance, his teacher, Cynthia Finch, stopped me.

"Mrs. Matthews, Tommy's meal fee for this month still hasn't been paid. This is the third reminder. Could you please take care of it today?"

A few other parents lingered nearby. At the words "meal fee," their eyes drifted toward me.

The smile on my face froze. I forced myself to nod.

"Of course. I'll pay right away."

I immediately sent Irvin a message:

Tommy's meal fee hasn't been paid this month. The teacher brought it up again today. Can you transfer me $680 so I can pay it now?

After I sent it, there was no reply. I stood outside the preschool, my palms slowly growing damp with sweat.

Ms. Finch glanced in my direction. She didn't say anything, but the look alone was enough to make my face burn.

Nearly ten minutes later, Irvin finally responded:

$680? A kid's meals cost that much? Fine, I'll pay, but send me the receipt first.

I typed back frantically:

It's a standard fee the preschool collects. It covers the whole semester. There's no receipt.

The next second, my phone rang. Irvin's impatient voice came through the speaker.

"Grace, you get twenty grand a month for household expenses. That's not enough for you? Now you need extra money just to feed the kid? And there's no receipt? How is there no receipt for a legitimate payment?"

I held back my anger and tried to explain.

"Every single expense comes out of my own pocket first, and then I submit it to you for reimbursement. That twenty thousand sitting in the bank account? I can't touch it. I have two hundred dollars on me. Anything even slightly over budget, I have to come to you."

"The teacher's waiting. Just transfer it to me first. I'll figure out a way to get them to issue a receipt."

Irvin exploded.

"What kind of attitude is that? You and the kid eat my food, spend my money, and now you have the nerve to raise your voice at me? So what if the twenty grand isn't in your hands? It still gets spent on you two! Look at this. A kid's meals alone cost six hundred and eighty dollars. You and that boy really know how to burn through cash!"

Money, money, always about money.

Our son's basic expenses, and in his mouth they became some unforgivable crime.

Just yesterday, I'd seen his sister post on Instagram, showing off a ten-thousand-dollar bracelet Irvin had bought her. And today he was nickel-and-diming me over $680.

I was shaking with anger, but for Tommy's sake, I had no choice but to swallow my pride and beg.

"Whatever the case, just transfer the money first. The teacher's already asked multiple times."

Two seconds of silence on the other end. Then his voice came back, cold as ice.

"You want my money? Fine. Get the teacher to issue a receipt first. Otherwise, forget it."

He hung up without a shred of mercy. I stared at my phone, my eyes stinging.

"Mrs. Matthews, are you ready to pay?"

Under Ms. Finch's expectant gaze, I wanted to disappear.

"Ms. Finch, would it be possible to get a receipt first?"

The moment the words left my mouth, the parents who had been quietly watching began to whisper among themselves.

"She needs a receipt for a six-hundred-and-eighty-dollar meal fee? She must be out of her mind broke."

"No way. I know that family. Her husband's supposedly amazing to her. Twenty thousand a month in household money, every single month without fail."

"Then why is she being so cheap? Don't tell me she's blowing all twenty grand on herself."

Under the weight of those stares, I sent the receipt I'd begged for to Irvin and got back six hundred and eighty dollars.

Once the fee was paid, I couldn't bear to stand there a second longer. I turned and left without looking back.

On the way home, I was scrolling through Instagram when I saw Loretta's latest post.

"So grateful to my son for these supplements! I've been dreaming about these for ages!"

I recognized the brand in the photo. A single box cost three thousand dollars, and Irvin had bought his mother five of them in one go.

My grip tightened around my phone. I stared at the screen until my eyes burned.

After I got home and put Tommy to sleep, I finally let myself open Loretta's post again.

It wasn't just the supplements Irvin had bought her. There were also screenshots of transfers he'd made to Loretta and to Susan.

I stared at that post for a long time. And then, out of nowhere, the memory hit me. Standing at the preschool gate, practically groveling, begging Irvin for six hundred and eighty dollars.

Six hundred and eighty dollars for a meal fee, and he'd dragged his feet and made excuses. But three-thousand-dollar supplements for his mother? He hadn't even blinked.

My chest felt tight. Almost without thinking, I opened my chat history with Irvin.

I scrolled up. The screen was packed with photos of receipts, one after another after another.

"Apples, $36. Approved."

"Kids' toothpaste, $22. Approved."

"Soy sauce, $9.80. No receipt. Denied."

None of the amounts were large.

But for every single one, I had to pay out of pocket first, log it, explain it, and then wait on pins and needles for his verdict. Approved or denied.

I stared at those photos, my fingers trembling, and tapped on the transfer records in Loretta's post.

The next second, I went completely still.

"Transfer to Mom: 0-05,000."

"Transfer to Susan: 0-00,000."

My mind went blank.

So not everything required a receipt. Irvin wasn't incapable of spending money, and he wasn't stingy.

He just couldn't bring himself to spend it on me and our son.

I stared at my phone, a slow sting building behind my eyes.

Right then, my phone buzzed. A voice message from my mom.

I tapped it open. Her voice came through, thin and strained.

"Gracie, I'm fine. My stomach's just acting up a little. I took a couple of painkillers. It'll pass. Don't worry about me. Just take care of Tommy."

Her forced cheerfulness made my chest clench.

Mom's stomach problems were nothing new. They'd been flaring up on and off for years. At their worst, she'd be drenched in cold sweat in the middle of the night, doubled over, unable to straighten her back.

I'd tried to get her to go to the hospital for a proper checkup, but she always refused.

The only reason she'd even texted me tonight was because the last time she'd had an episode, I'd pressured her into going.

I called her immediately.

"Mom, you didn't go to the hospital again, did you?"

Two seconds of silence. Then her voice came through, weak.

"What do I need the hospital for? It's the same old thing. Why waste that kind of money?"

"How is it a waste?"

The words rushed out of me.

"You're in this much pain and you still won't go? What if something serious happens? What am I supposed to do then?"

Mom sighed.

"The doctor already said last time. An endoscopy, medication, rest. All of it costs money. You're not exactly flush yourself. I don't want to be a burden."

My throat closed up. For a long time, I couldn't say a word.

After I hung up, I looked down at my phone and checked my balance.

Two hundred and thirty-seven dollars.

A little over a hundred more in my other account.

Combined, it wasn't even enough to cover a decent checkup for her.

I sat on the couch, staring at those numbers for a long time. Finally, I opened my chat with Irvin.

"My mom's stomach problems are acting up again. She's in a lot of pain. I need a thousand dollars to take her to the hospital for an exam."

After I sent the message, I had no confidence he'd agree.

Sure enough, less than a minute later, Irvin replied.

"The household money is for this family. It's not for you to funnel back to your side."

My chest tightened. I clenched my teeth and kept typing.

"Consider it a loan. My mom just needs money to see a doctor. I'll pay you back once I'm earning again."

His reply came almost instantly.

"Once you're earning? And when exactly would that be? You're just a housewife. You're still living off me. Don't start getting ideas."

"Grace, I'm not trying to be harsh, but every time your mom has the slightest ache, you come running to me for money. You think I'm made of it? I've told you beforestop trying to use my money to fill that bottomless pit your family is."

I stared at those lines of text, a dull ache pressing against my chest.

It wasn't as if I'd never had the chance to work. When we got married, Irvin told me he wanted me to stay home as a full-time housewife, to hold down the fort so he could focus on his career.

He told me back then that he'd always take care of me. Now every one of those promises had turned to dust.

Just then, my phone rang again.

It was my mom.

The moment I picked up, I heard her voice trembling, like she was fighting to hold something back.

"Gracie, Mom just threw up again. My stomach's churning something awful, and there's a bitter taste in my mouth."

I shot up from the couch.

"Mom, what's going on with you?"

There was a burst of frantic noise on the other end, and then my aunt's panicked voice cut through.

"Grace, get here now! Your mom just threw up blood!"

By the time I reached the hospital, my mom had already been wheeled into the ER.

The second Patty Whitfield saw me, tears spilled down her face.

"Grace, thank God you're here! Your mom suddenly vomited a huge amount of blood. The doctor said it's gastric bleeding. They need to run tests, so you have to pay right away!"

My head went blank, a single sharp ringing drowning out everything else. It felt like someone had swung a bat straight into my face.

Gastric bleeding. Mom's chronic stomach problems had finally been neglected into something serious.

The billing window was just down the hall. I practically ran to it.

"Hi, how much do I need to put down?"

The nurse behind the glass glanced at the form without looking up.

"Five thousand upfront."

Five thousand dollars.

I fumbled through my bag, my fingertips shaking so badly I could barely grip my phone.

Two hundred and thirty-seven in one account. One hundred and sixty-three in the other. Thirty-seven dollars and eighty cents in my bank account.

All together, it didn't even cover a fraction.

I stared at the numbers on the screen, and the color drained from my face.

The nurse saw me frozen there and frowned.

"Ma'am, there are people waiting behind you. Go get the payment sorted. The patient's waiting on tests."

I opened my mouth, but not a single word came out.

Patty followed me over. When she saw me standing there rigid, the look in her eyes shifted.

"Grace, you didn't bring any money?"

My eyes burned, and I couldn't even lift my head.

It wasn't that I hadn't brought any. I simply didn't have any.

The nurse pressed again.

"Can you pay or not? We can't move forward with the process without it."

In the end, I sent Irvin another message.

"My mom has gastric bleeding. She's in the ER right now. They need five thousand upfront. Transfer it to me. Please hurry."

One second. Two seconds. Ten seconds. Nothing from his end.

I sent another message.

It's real. It's urgent. The doctor is pushing for payment.

Still no reply.

I clenched my teeth and dialed his number. My voice was shaking when I spoke.

"Irvin, my mom is in the hospital with gastric bleeding. They need five thousand dollars upfront. Just transfer it to me. Consider it a loan. You can dock it from the household budget however you want."

"Gastric bleeding?"

He cut me off, impatient.

"Grace, is your family really so desperate for money that they'd make up something like this?"

My head buzzed like a bomb had gone off. My ears rang.

"What did you just say?"

Irvin let out a cold laugh.

"Your mom had a stomachache a minute ago, and now it's gastric bleeding? How convenient. You just asked me for money for an exam, and suddenly she's hospitalized?"

My whole body went cold. Even my teeth were chattering.

"Irvin, I'm not joking! My mom is in the ER right now. The doctor just put in the orders!"

He replied in no particular hurry.

"So where are the orders?"

"What?"

His voice dripped with a mockery I'd never heard before.

"The payment slip. The medical records. The test results. Without those, how am I supposed to know if your mother is actually sick, or if your whole family cooked this up to squeeze money out of me?"

In that instant, a chill shot from the soles of my feet straight to the top of my skull. Every drop of blood in my body ran cold.

I gripped the phone, my hand trembling so badly I could barely hold it.

"Irvin, that's my mother."

"So what? I've told you before. The household money is for this household. It's not for you to pour into the bottomless pit that is your family. Your mom gets sick, and that's my problem?"

I bit down hard on my lip. The taste of blood filled my mouth almost instantly. I couldn't hold it in anymore.

"Household money, household money! Have you forgotten that I'm part of this household too? You said you give me twenty thousand a month. I want to spend five thousand to save my mother's life, and I can't even do that?"

"Irvin, don't be so heartless!"

The moment the words left my mouth, a scoff came through the phone.

"Heartless? If you think I'm so heartless, then stop spending my money. A useless woman who can't earn a dime and has to beg for handouts has no right to talk back to me."

"I'll say it one last time. You want money? Show me a receipt first."

He hung up. Just like that.

Every word he'd said buried itself in my chest like a knife.

The nurse walked over again. Her tone had turned impatient.

"Ma'am, are you paying or not? The patient can't wait."

Tears flooded my eyes all at once, but I didn't even have time to wipe them. I held up my phone, snapped a photo of the payment slip, and sent it to Irvin.

Here. I'm sending you the photo right now. Is that good enough? Just transfer the money!

His reply came fast.

A payment slip means nothing. Could be real, could be fake. Unless it's an official receipt, I don't recognize it.

After that, silence. I stared at the screen as it went dark, feeling as though someone had carved a hole straight through my chest.

Aunt Patty stood beside me, her voice trembling with panic.

"Gracie, is it going to work or not? Your mom just threw up blood again. The doctor says they can't wait any longer!"

It was going to work. Of course it was going to work.

I wiped my tears, turned away, and typed my ID number into a loan app.

You won't give me money? Fine. I'll figure it out myself.

NovelReader Pro
Enjoy this story and many more in our app
Use this code in the app to continue reading
628122
Story Code|Tap to copy
1

Download
NovelReader Pro

2

Copy
Story Code

3

Paste in
Search Box

4

Continue
Reading

Get the app and use the story code to continue where you left off

«
»
This is the last post.!

相关推荐

The Perfect Husband's Receipt Trap A Wife's Revenge

2026/04/03

1Views

The Alpha and His Six Pups Begged for My Return

2026/04/02

2Views

His Heart for Hers,A Billionaire's Final Redemption

2026/04/02

1Views

He Gave Me Millions But I Could Only Spend Fifty ,Then His Mother Paid the Price

2026/04/02

2Views

The Day I Found Her Pregnancy Test, I Sold Everything to Her Rival

2026/04/02

1Views

Dog Hair on His Shirt Exposed His Affair,So I Destroyed Him

2026/04/02

1Views